When dogs look back: inhibition of independent problem-solving behaviour in domestic dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) compared with wolves (Canis lupus).
Udell. Monique A R MA
Key Findings
- Dogs are far less persistent than wolves in solving a puzzle box (5% vs 80% success).
- Dogs often look to humans for help rather than keep trying independently.
Practical Outcomes
- There are no actionable insights for using humanin or improving longevity, metabolic health, or performance. The findings are purely about animal behavior and don’t translate into protocols for the biohacking community.
Summary
The study shows that dogs, unlike wolves, tend to give up quickly on puzzle tasks and look to humans for help, suggesting they rely more on humans than on their own problem‑solving abilities. This has no direct link to the peptide humanin or any health‑optimizing actions for biohackers.
Abstract
Domestic dogs have been recognized for their social sensitivity and aptitude in human-guided tasks. For example, prior studies have demonstrated that dogs look to humans when confronted with an unsolvable task; an action often interpreted as soliciting necessary help. Conversely, wolves persist on such tasks. While dogs' 'looking back' behaviour has been used as an example of socio-cognitive advancement, an alternative explanation is that pet dogs show less persistence on independent tasks more generally. In this study, pet dogs, shelter dogs and wolves were given up to three opportunities to open a solvable puzzle box: when subjects were with a neutral human caretaker, alone and when encouraged by the human. Wolves were more persistent and more successful on this task than dogs, with 80% average success rate for wolves versus a 5% average success rate for dogs in both the human-in and alone conditions. Dogs showed increased contact with the puzzle box during the encouragement condition, but only a moderate increase in problem-solving success. Social sensitivity appears to play an important role in pet and shelter dogs' willingness to engage in problem-solving behaviour, which could suggest generalized dependence on, or deference to, human action.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-09-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1098/rsbl.2015.0489
94
11